“…Although overt threats and intimidation are sometimes present in real‐world interrogations (e.g., Cleary & Warner, ; Kassin et al, ; Leo, ), interrogators are typically trained to elicit confessions via subtler psychological manipulation (i.e., the Reid Technique; Inbau, Reid, Buckley, & Jayne, ), which jurors may not see as coercive. Several studies have found that jurors discounted confessions obtained via psychological manipulation (e.g., Horgan, Russano, Meissner, & Evans, ; Woestehoff & Meissner, ), while others suggest that jurors do not see these techniques as problematic (Leo & Liu, ) and are no less likely to convict when they are used (Kassin & McNall, ). Because our study depicted the exoneree's interrogation as either overtly or not‐at‐all coercive, we cannot say how jurors would react to an exoneree who confessed in response to subtler forms of coercion.…”